New idea to kill hurricanes: wind turbines

Stanford simulations show offshore wind farms could tame hurricanes

Computer simulations by Professor Mark Z. Jacobson have shown that offshore wind farms with thousands of wind turbines could have sapped the power of three real-life hurricanes, significantly decreasing their winds and accompanying storm surge, and possib

Computer simulations by Professor Mark Z. Jacobson have shown that offshore wind farms with thousands of wind turbines could have sapped the power of three real-life hurricanes, significantly decreasing their winds and accompanying storm surge, and possib

But costs in the trillions and environmental considerations will blow away any chances of that happening – at least over the next several decades.

The proposal – published in the scientific journal Nature Climate Change – involves placing tens of thousands of turbines around the nation's Gulf and Atlantic coastlines.

Mark Jacobson, a Stanford University professor of environmental engineering, says they could cut a hurricane's destructive winds and storm surge by up to 80 percent. He estimates that Miami, Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach would need about 40,000 turbines apiece to be spared a hurricane.

"You'd have them staggered in farms, ideally right in front of the cities," he said. "If you have enough turbines, you can extract enough energy to prevent winds from getting up that high."

One of the nation's top atmospheric scientists thinks it's a "great idea," even if it would be a logistical nightmare.

Using a special computer model, Jacobson found that 78,000 wind turbines – each about 50 stories tall – around New Orleans would have reduced Category 3 Hurricane Katrina's winds from 125 mph to about 48 mph, or what would amount to a mediocre tropical storm. The turbines also would have reduced the catastrophic storm surge by 79 percent.

Although they turbines cost about $10 million apiece, Jacobson notes "they would pay for themselves" because their primary purpose would be to generate electricity and reduce dependence on fossil fuels.

"You would put them up for energy generation, and they would also happen to weaken storms," he said.

The turbines' giant rotor blades would spin in the winds of an approaching storm, extracting energy from it. The blades also would create a turbulent wake that would further disrupt the system.

Each year, weather watchers and experts alike dream up numerous proposals to kill hurricanes. Among them: dump gobs of absorbent material, similar to Kitty Litter, into the storm's eye to deprive of it moisture or pour loads of dry ice into its path to deprive it of heat.

"Nuking a storm is the most common one I get," said Dennis Feltgen, spokesman for the National Hurricane Center. "The thought process is well-intentioned, but logistically, it wouldn't work."